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In Sunday's letter to Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner and the task force, the advisers the the five-year restructuring plan presented by company on Feb. 17 moves GM in the right direction. However, the plan puts too much faith in the economy turning around quickly and annual car and truck sales ratcheting up to previous levels, the letter said. "GM bondholders have been asked to make deeper cuts than other stakeholders: namely, to reduce two-thirds of our instruments' principal and trade it for speculative securities that may, if the currently planned cost reductions and sales projections prove inaccurate, end up having little or no value," they said. "All other parties involved in the restructuring process will walk away with far more." The advisers said bondholders are "disappointed" that neither GM nor the auto task force has responded to their proposal. GM spokeswoman Renee Rashid-Merem said Sunday the company will not comment specifically on the letter other than to say it continues to work toward an agreement with the bondholders. She also defended GM's turnaround plan as comprehensive proposal that will ensure the company's long-term viability. "It's a dynamic plan," she said.
[Associated
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